All the President’s Insecurities
Donald Trump is his own whistle-blower.
By Maureen
Dowd
Opinion
Columnist
Sept. 12,
2020, 11:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/12/opinion/sunday/donald-trump-bob-woodward.html
WASHINGTON
— During his 2016 bid, Donald Trump would sometimes pause from bashing elites
and the media to speak with awe about a phone call he had with a Very Important
Journalist.
Trump
puffed up with pride as he told the story to bemused rallygoers, who only
moments before had been jeering at the press.
It was, to
say the least, a mixed message from the phony populist.
During an
interview in June 2016 at Trump Tower, Trump bragged to me about the call with
the journalist, who turned out to be Tom Friedman. Lately, Trump has been
boasting about Tom’s praise for the White House’s Israel-United Arab Emirates
peace plan.
Like Stella
Dallas standing in the rain outside the gates of the mansion where her daughter
is getting married, Donald Trump has always had his nose pressed up against the
window of the elites.
“For a man
who has risen to the highest office on the planet, President Trump radiates
insecurity,” former Ambassador Kim Darroch wrote to his colleagues in London,
in a leaked cable.
Steve
Bannon once told me that Trump was much more concerned about CNN’s coverage
than Fox’s. Trump was not seeking affirmation from the nighttime slate of Fox
knuckleheads; they were in the bag. Unserious though he may be, Trump covets
praise from serious people. And serious Sean Hannity is not.
Fresh off
his win in 2016, he was eager to come talk to The New York Times. I’ve never
seen Trump happier than in that hour with the “failing” New York Times. (He
even got to upbraid me in front of my boss.) As we wrapped up, he told the
assembled editors, reporters and Times brass: “It’s a great honor. I will say,
The Times is, it’s a great, great American jewel. A world jewel. And I hope we
can all get along.”
That same
eager tone was echoed in the audio of Bob Woodward’s tapes with Trump, as the
president warmly spoke the name “Bob” again and again, yearning for acceptance
from the very establishment that he had denounced to win the Oval Office.
Even though
Woodward keeps writing books about Trump with titles that sound like Hitchcock
horror flicks — first “Fear” and now “Rage” — Trump somehow thought he could
win over the pillar of the Washington establishment.
“I brought
something that I’ve never shown to anybody,” the president told the writer in
December 2019. “I’m going to show it to you. I’ll get you something that’s sort
of cool.”
He had an
aide bring photos of him with Kim Jong-un, including some capturing the moment
when the two leaders stepped over the line between North and South Korea.
“Pretty
cool,” Trump gushed. “You know? Pretty cool. Right?” He added, “I mean, they’re
cool pictures when you — you know, when you talk about iconic pictures, how
about that?”
In a later
interview, he gave Woodward a poster-size picture of himself and Kim, saying:
“I don’t even know why I’m giving it to you. That’s my only one.” He trumpeted
about Kim: “He never smiled before. I’m the only one he smiles with.”
Trump also
bragged to the man who helped break the Watergate story, which sparked an
impeachment inquiry, that he handled impeachment with more aplomb than his
predecessors.
“Nixon was
in a corner with his thumb in his mouth,” Trump said. “Bill Clinton took it
very, very hard. I don’t.”
Woodward
once told me that every president gets the psychoanalyst he deserves.
But at
least with Nixon, Woodward had to follow the money to expose the venality. With
Donald Trump, he simply had to turn on a recorder.
Trump is
his own whistle-blower.
As The
Times’s Nick Confessore put it on MSNBC: “Trump is the first candidate for
president to launch an October surprise against himself. It’s as if Nixon sent
the Nixon tapes to Woodward in an envelope by FedEx.”
Trump
fiends for legitimacy even as he undercuts any chance of being seen as
legitimate. He is fact-based and cogent on the Woodward tape talking in early
February about how the coronavirus is airborne and deadly and dangerous for
young people. But he vitiated that by publicly downplaying the vital
information for his own political advantage.
For more
than a week, instead of focusing on his peace deals and his nomination for the
“Noble Prize,” as a Trump campaign ad spelled it, everyone has been focused on
a story that contends he called Americans who died in war “suckers” and
“losers.”
Trump
desperately wants approval even as he seems relentlessly driven to prove he’s
not worthy of it.
He may be
ludicrously un-self-aware, but even he sensed that his tango with Woodward
would end badly. It was fun for a while, bro-ing out in the Oval with his
fellow septuagenarian big shot, batting around the finer points of white
privilege. But it could not last.
“You’re
probably going to screw me,” the president told the writer. “You know, because
that’s the way it goes.”
Even so,
the unreflective Narcissus will never drag himself away from his reflecting
pool. You know, because that’s the way it goes.
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